Amy Walters

Amy Walters (Amy Rose "Rosie" Angelica Marie Margaret Walters; November 11, 1927 – September 2, 1999) was the Commanding Officer of the 17th Division of the Barakian Army before her retirement in November 11, 1978 after which she moved to the Federal Republic of Germany in November 11, 1979 where she stayed until her death in 1999. She also briefly held command of the York-Lancaster Battleship-type Fleets of the Regal Royal Navy during the Battle of Burma York-Lancaster; compared to her more cautious and wary mother, Amy never shied from the heat of battle, preferring to battle alongside her men, which earned her their respect as well as their loyalty.

Known as "Rosie" among her family and close friends, Amy Walters was born during the Great Innovation Era and was named after her great-grandfather`s beloved wife, Lavender Rose "Rosie" Walters-Lancaster. As the youngest child/sixth daughter of famed military officers, she was not expected to join the military, as her parents believed that she wouldn`t survive past her teenager years due to her severe case of asthma and severe social anxiety. She attended both naval and army colleges as a teenager, secretly of course, and served in the Barakian Army during the Second World War. In 1946, while attending a joint military ceremony in Britain, she was almost assassinated by anti-monarchy arcanists; the military branch in which she served deployed her to the north of the Kingdom of Burma York-Lancaster (a member nation of the Mythical Nations) where she was almost assassinated again. In the mid 50`s, she came underneath the direct command of her own mother, serving as her aide-de-campe; though her mother never realized that it was her. In September 2, 1999, on the anniversary of the end of the Second World War in Europe; Amy died in Berlin, the capital of the Federal Republic of Germany. Despite having been an enemy military officer to Nazi Germany during the Second World War, her death was mourned with ceremonial candles and laurels; the news of her death brought such wide-spread mourning that even the other